Sanamed (Dec 2016)
OCCIPITAL LOBE EPILEPSY OR MIGRAINE HEADACHE
Abstract
Introduction: Occipital lobe epilepsies are rarely met in clinical practice, but when they occur, they can be misdiagnosed as migraine-like headache. Their prevalence ranges from 5%to 10% of all epilepsies. Seizures can occur at any age; etiologically speaking they can be symptomatic, cryptogenic and idiopathic (most often onsetis in childhood). Clinical symptomatology is manifested by partial epileptic seizures in the sense of visual elementary and/or complex manifestations, palinopsia, amaurosis, tonic head deviation, bulbus, nistagmus and headache. Propagation discharge to neighbour areas (temporal, parietal and frontal) is a frequent occurrence appearing with complex partial seizures frequently finishing with secondary generalized tonic-clonic (GTC) seizures. Case report: We are presenting a17-year-old male patient who has suffered from attacks of visual problemswith headache since 10 years of age. All the time it is treated as a migraine headache. During the last attack of headache the patient also had a loss of consciousness, EEG that was performed for the first time evidenced epileptic discharges of the occipital area. The therapy also included treatment with antiepileptic drug pregabalin resulting in seizure withdrawal. Conclusion: The appearance of visual symptoms followed by headache is most frequently qualified as migraine triggered headache. However, when antimigraine therapy does not give favorable results epileptic headache should be suspected, with obligatory performance of EEG recording. Occipital lobe epilepsy often presents diagnostic dilemmas due to clinical manifestations that are similar to that of non-migraine headache.
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